Sayfalar

Monday, November 5, 2018

Free Media Essential for Stability

When Kenya’s First Lady stormed the newsroom of the country’s largest media
house nine years ago and tried to slap a journalist, various questions were asked
about her sense of decorum and the powers of the president’s family.
Less prominent in the public discussion was a question which dominated Nation
Media Group’s own internal review of the incident: What if the First Lady had a gun
and had gone on to use it?
Concern about journalists' safety flares and fades in Africa in tandem with incidents
of physical attacks on media professionals. Unlike the continual debate about media
freedom, the very survival of journalists as human beings, oddly, is never seen as an
essential ingredient of democratic development.
Yet the ability of media to hold government to account – the skillful coverage of
authority, conduct of open debate and management of media messages – depends
first and foremost on the existence of journalists, the men and women who put their
lives at risk for the truth to be known and unwelcome opinion to be expressed.
It is a reality which, unfortunately for media, is more readily recognised by
governments and all who fight for power than by the wider public for whom media
promotes free expression. Which is why, almost without exception, attacks on
journalists are perpetrated by state agents and shadowy political forces jostling for
political or economic control.
As a result, threats to the safety of journalists in Africa appear to increase or decline
in direct proportion to a country’s political stability, respect for law, degree of media
professionalism and the public’s ability or willingness to stand up for its civil rights.
South of the Sahara, the countries in which journalists’ safety have come under
severe attack include Tanzania, Rwanda, Congo, Togo, Mali and war-torn Somalia.
The incident involving Kenya’s First Lady was more the exception than the rule in this
east African state, but it illustrates the hidden dangers faced by the media where
journalists’ safety is taken for granted.
Attacks on reporters and photographers covering conflict, mostly ethnic clashes and
political riots, have recently forced media houses in Kenya to make riot helmets, flack
jackets and the occasional gas mask part of newsroom equipment.
Theirs is a less mortifying danger than that faced by journalists in Tanzania, where in
the past two years alone, three journalists have been brutally killed or maimed
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because of their work. In the west of the country, Issa Ngumba, a reporter with a
community radio station was found strangled and shot dead while the chairman of the
Tanzania Editors’ Forum, Absalom Kibanda, had his eye damaged and teeth
knocked out, again, by unidentified assailants.
Political transition appears to put journalists in particular jeopardy. Tanzania is
hurtling towards a general election which threatens the ruling party’s 50-year hold on
power. In Mali, the editor of Le Republicain was arrested and beaten up during a
coup attempt in March after his paper questioned the exorbitant salary of the
rebellion’s leader.
Similar hostility was experienced by media in the Central African Republic earlier this
year after the ousting of President Francois Bozize by Islamic rebels. To the east,
war-torn Somalia, where 16 journalists have been killed this year alone, is considered
the world’s most dangerous place for media professionals.
It used to be that their prominence in society and the public-interest nature of their
work guaranteed journalists protection from even the most bloodthirsty outlaws in
society. Not anymore, as attacks on reporters by drug gangs and guerrillas from
Mexico to Nigeria have shown. Today, training in personal safety is becoming as
essential in some African states as the basic skills of gathering facts and writing.
Whether the threat to journalists is driven by conflict or political intolerance, the place
of journalism, and the media of which it is the lifeblood, has to be recognised and
secured for the sake of national stability. A society where media professional feel
threatened because of their work will forever remain a fertile ground for bad
government, civil strife and all-out violence.
Joseph Odindo, former Editorial Director of the Nation
Media Group, Nairobi, Kenya
Joseph Odindo writes on media issues in Africa. He was
involved in advocacy and formulation of policy concerning
journalists' safety at the Nation and during his term as chairman
of the Media Council of Kenya in 2013.

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